Bernard Hopkins once again didn't mince words when voicing his criticism of Donovan McNabb during Comcast SportsNet's Monday Night Live program.
Here's part of what Hopkins said when asked about where the Eagles stand this year:
"Some people are athletes, still good, but don’t have that extra ‘I’m willing to sacrifice my life. I’m willing to sacrifice what I have to sacrifice to win.’ … People never forgot when things happen, they see a guy crumble under pressure. Whether they throw up on the highway, whether they throw up on the court, whether they throw up on the football field, when people see that, that sticks in the back of their mind."
Hopkins was obviously referring to the Eagles' Super Bowl loss to the Patriots. Some of you made the same reference in our live chat Sunday night when John Madden said McNabb looked winded as the Birds' offense failed to get a play off before the two-minute warning in the fourth quarter.
Hopkins continued: "Every athlete should have that killer instinct in him, especially if you the quarterback… If he’s not right here and here [pointing to heart and head], and don’t want it, the team feel the vibes…"
Up to this point in the interview, Hopkins had not mentioned McNabb by name. Host Ron Burke asked Hopkins specifically if he questioned McNabb's ability to take the Eagles to the promised land, and Hopkins responded, "Years ago, years ago."
Hopkins went on to say that he thinks McNabb would be better off playing in Chicago, where he's from.
"The reason things are the way they are is because of the money wrapped in him. They can’t get rid of him," Hopkins said.
McNabb's former teammate and current WIP host Ike Reese was sitting next to Hopkins during the conversation. He shook his head in disagreement during the interview and told Hopkins he was wrong as the segment concluded.
Again, this is not exactly breaking news, considering Hopkins has criticized McNabb for years, but just thought I'd pass along the latest installment.

Hopkins rips McNabb (again)

Sheil Kapadia, Philly.com

Bernard Hopkins once again didn't mince words when voicing his criticism of Donovan McNabb during Comcast SportsNet's Monday Night Live program.

Here's part of what Hopkins said when asked about where the Eagles stand this year:

"Some people are athletes, still good, but don’t have that extra ‘I’m willing to sacrifice my life. I’m willing to sacrifice what I have to sacrifice to win.’ … People never forgot when things happen, they see a guy crumble under pressure. Whether they throw up on the highway, whether they throw up on the court, whether they throw up on the football field, when people see that, that sticks in the back of their mind."

Hopkins was obviously referring to the Eagles' Super Bowl loss to the Patriots. Some of you made the same reference in our live chat Sunday night when John Madden said McNabb looked winded as the Birds' offense failed to get a play off before the two-minute warning in the fourth quarter.

Hopkins continued: "Every athlete should have that killer instinct in him, especially if you the quarterback… If he’s not right here and here [pointing to heart and head], and don’t want it, the team feel the vibes…"

Up to this point in the interview, Hopkins had not mentioned McNabb by name. Host Ron Burke asked Hopkins specifically if he questioned McNabb's ability to take the Eagles to the promised land, and Hopkins responded, "Years ago, years ago."

Hopkins went on to say that he thinks McNabb would be better off playing in Chicago, where he's from.

"The reason things are the way they are is because of the money wrapped in him. They can’t get rid of him," Hopkins said.

McNabb's former teammate and current WIP host Ike Reese was sitting next to Hopkins during the conversation. He shook his head in disagreement during the interview and told Hopkins he was wrong as the segment concluded.

Again, this is not exactly breaking news, considering Hopkins has criticized McNabb for years, but just thought I'd pass along the latest installment.

Sheil Kapadia is in his fifth season writing about the Eagles and the NFL for philly.com. His earliest
memories as a sports fan include several trips to Veterans Stadium with
his Dad. He's not a beat writer or an Insider, but is here to
discuss the NFL 365 days a year. E-mail him at skapadia@philly.com or
by clicking here